Legal experts widely doubt the order's success, but some suggest Trump may find sympathetic judges—if the case can withstand lengthy legal challenges.
From Judge Trevor McFadden's opinion last week in Sedita v. U.S. (D.D.C.): "Where was the Judge whom he had never seen? Where was the High Court, to which ...
Christians are called to follow Jesus and reject coercive forms of religious and political power, to live lives of love and ...
Meta, admitting previous attempts at moderation have fallen into the realm of censorship, will end its third-party fact check program, and adopt a Community Notes model powered by contributing users ...
Trump’s actions and rhetoric have served as a lightning rod of constitutional controversy, drawing concern from First ...
America’s increasingly crowded public square was often filled with hostility, becoming an angry arena where people shout past one another across religious and ideological divides.
Common practice for liberals and conservatives now is to take turns calling each other enemies of the First Amendment. The results of this year’s “State of the First Amendment” survey gave ...
It is too much to hope that one executive will change the constitutional awareness of the executive branch’s unelected actors. But change must begin somewhere.
It was in 1951 that India's first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, amended the Constitution for the first time, because the "Constitution came in the way" of urgent social changes. A look at what led ...
The 14th Amendment was passed by the U.S. Senate in 1866 and ratified two years later by 28 of the 37 states at that time, ...
Q: Did former President Joe Biden issue a statement saying that he thought the Equal Rights Amendment should be considered ...
After President Donald Trump signed an executive order to change the meaning of the 14th Amendment to end “birthright ...